Supercharged Trade-In
NE Thomas
Mexico, Missouri
I tell him I am going to dump the car in a year or 2 then what? He says he has a network of folks who will pay good $$s for a properly modified and balanced car backed by his reputation. Gave me some examples but sure seems too good to be true.
So what has been anyone with a heavily modified cars experience?
On private resale, you will get a little more for the car but it will be a little harder to find a buyer at all.
As for trade in, many dealers will not even consider a modified car...or will pay so little it will make you cry. Used car dealers specializing in performance cars may be a different story.
If you have the time, try to sell with the mods. You might get lucky and find a buyer willing to pay good money. If not, as others have said, to get maximum money, remove the mods, sell them, and sell the car in stock condition.
If, however, you want to move to the C7Z (which from our PMs I don't think will happen
), then short-term power adders should always be removed to increase resale to a dealer.Trickier mods like camshafts are usually left in the car, since the price is so high to remove them in the case of the C7. You would just need to be careful to choose a mild/stealth cam to be able to run on the factory calibration (if possible).
At the end of the day, though, the blower kits don't leave too much of a trace behind, especially if you have the original panels. Procharger gives you everything to keep all of your factory parts, and the others would require you to purchase 1-2 parts to get everything back to 100% stock.
Internal engine modifications are far harder to come back from.
The Best of Corvette for Corvette Enthusiasts
An issue that is going to be a bigger deal in the future is when the subsequent buyer gets the nasty surprise that the power train warranty coverage is denied when the "tracks" of a modification are found. I am not familiar with what GM is doing with the ECM of cars to track modification but recent diesel pickups have multiple electronic tattletales including storing peak torque statistics along with the mechanical signs (starburst burn pattern on piston face) that gets checked during major failures during warranty. I imagine dealers are becoming more careful with nearly new low mileage vehicles (that will likely be sold through the dealer) although those older/higher mileage vehicles destined for auction probably get far less scrutiny so keep that in mind if you are thinking of trading in a car in the first few years.
Fun has to take precedence over finances when modifying
Something makes me think (and this could be complete BS/speculation) that in the first case, after taking the trade, a GM dealer would just run all the required checkpoints and re-program the original CVN checksums and restore the factory warranty before selling it through an authorized dealership.
Last, and least honest, method is to purchase a second ECM to swap back and forth after returning to stock. This is a really sticky issue, though. I won't say my dealer didn't offer that to me though...
It probably won't happen but it would be nice to be able to buy the new vehicle at discount with a short warranty (say 90 days or a year) on the powertrain for those who plan to modify since they will likely lose it anyway.
It probably won't happen but it would be nice to be able to buy the new vehicle at discount with a short warranty (say 90 days or a year) on the powertrain for those who plan to modify since they will likely lose it anyway.
If you're just going to replace the factory exhaust with an axle-back, that voids nothing.
If you're going to be getting your work done @ Trenary, they're pretty cool to work with mod-wise. After all, they have crazier people like me to worry about there.
Not going to find a used modded C7 yet...
That was on cars I installed the mods. My C7 the mods were installed
by A&A themselves and I already decided if and when I decide to sell this car.
It goes like it is. Runs like stock with lots of extra power!
The blower kit adds so much to a Corvette. Better car with the kit!
As for trade in, many dealers will not even consider a modified car...or will pay so little it will make you cry. Used car dealers specializing in performance cars may be a different story.
If you have the time, try to sell with the mods. You might get lucky and find a buyer willing to pay good money. If not, as others have said, to get maximum money, remove the mods, sell them, and sell the car in stock condition.
If it's really a good deal then have that tuner slap in the supercharger....
Sell the car privately rather than trade in. If the car is a lease then don't even consider doing it.
Jmo




















